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FROM SILICON VALLEY TO THE ALTAR

How a Power Couple Left Tech to Build DFW's Premier Wedding Venue

 

On a Friday afternoon at Knotting Hill Place, Becky Banner never looking at an empty ballroom. She's in the middle of a wedding. By the time that couple dance their last song late at night, the next wedding is already being set up. 

By Monday evening, the cycle repeats. It's Tuesday before the venue finally takes a breath, quiet for a couple of days, when the 55-foot ceilings echo with silence instead of celebration. In those 48 hours, the team walks through the space envisioning the next couple's vision, mentally mapping how the ballroom will transform for them. 

Knotting Hill Place books almost every Thursday through Monday. In eight years, it's become so successful that downtime is a luxury, not a problem. This isn't by accident.

After 25 years building data centers and managing teams in the technology industry, after raising six children while climbing the corporate ladder at Cisco Systems, after co-founding two startups, Becky made a choice that surprised many: she walked away from the predictable, prestigious world of tech to build a wedding venue from the ground up. 

Her husband Brian—who met at Cisco a quarter-century ago—made the same leap. "I realized I'd spent decades solving complex technical problems for corporations," Becky says, settling into one of the venue's elegant gathering spaces. "But I wanted to solve a different kind of problem: creating magical moments for people on one of the most important days of their lives."

Today, eight years after opening Knotting Hill Place on a carefully chosen piece of Little Elm land, the couple has hosted over 2,000 weddings and events. They've built a business rooted in faith, dreams, and hard work—the same values that now drive their expansion into florals, bridal wear, and the next chapter of what has become a luxury wedding empire.

Their story is one of strategic pivots, calculated risk, and the power of partnership.

 THE TECH YEARS

Brian and Becky met in the late 1990s at Cisco Systems, where both were climbing corporate ladders in the technology sector. They each brought complementary skills: Becky thrived in leadership, coaching, and client relationships; Brian excelled in business, finance and real-estate. While raising their six children, they continued building careers that most would call successful by every conventional measure.  But success in tech doesn't always translate to fulfillment.

"We were good at what we did," Brian reflects. "Very good, actually. But there was something missing—a sense of purpose beyond the bottom line."

After Cisco, Becky worked at a national network integrator. She co-founded MpowerMe, a national data center consulting firm. Brian retired from Cisco after 23 years.  The income was solid. The résumés were impressive. The kids had security.  Yet something gnawed at them.   

"When faced with ambiguity and adversity, I've always risen to the occasion," Becky says. "But I realized I was doing that for shareholders and clients I barely knew. I wasn't doing it for something I truly believed in."

 THE PIVOT

Around 2015, the idea began to crystallize. What if they could take everything they'd learned about building teams, solving problems under pressure, and creating systems that worked—and apply it to something entirely different?  What if they built something in an industry rooted in joy?  The wedding industry seemed improbable for a couple with zero hospitality background. No event planning experience. No venue management. But it also seemed logical in an unexpected way.  "The wedding industry at its core is about people," Becky explains. "Not just creating beautiful events, but facilitating the moments that matter—families gathering, lifelong commitments, joy. That resonated with me in a way tech never did."

They began researching the Dallas-Fort Worth wedding market in 2015. What they found was a gap: luxury venues existed, certainly, but most were either hotel ballrooms (sterile, corporate feel) or outdoor estates (weather-dependent, limited capacity). Few were purpose-built for weddings with the flexibility to accommodate 300 guests and transform into any bride's vision.  "We wanted to build something unlike anything else in DFW," Becky says. "Not just beautiful, but intentional. Every detail designed with the bride and groom in mind."  The search for land took over a year. They worked closely with the City of Little Elm, identifying a property that met their specific criteria: privacy, direct street access, proximity to the airport, and urban accessibility. They wanted couples coming from across North Texas—or the country—to have easy access.  The property on West Eldorado Parkway felt right.

 

THE BUILD

Building a luxury venue from raw land isn't a weekend project. It's a test of faith, patience, and partnership.  Construction began in 2017. The Banners were hands-on at every stage. Becky oversaw design decisions with obsessive attention to detail; they walked contractors through the space repeatedly, imagining how light would hit the dance floor at sunset, how the flow would move guests from ceremony to reception, where emotional moments would naturally occur.  "I wanted every bride to feel like this space was built for her,"s he says. "Not likes he was squeezing their wedding into someone else's vision."   

Brian handled timelines, budgets, and logistics. As challenges inevitably arose during construction, he stayed focused on financial and operational realities while Becky led the creative vision. Their partnership worked at its best.  "Brian dreams. Together they execute. Becky sees possibilities. I see constraints and figure out how to work within them," Brian explains. "Separately, we're good. Together, we're complementary."  Knotting Hill Place opened in 2018.

 

THE SUCCESS

The first year was cautious. Would couples actually choose an unknown venue built by tech entrepreneurs over established brands? Would the market embrace their French Chateau aesthetic and purpose-built design? 

The answer came quickly: yes.

By year two, they were at capacity. By year three, they added Brighton Abbey, an adjoining event space that expanded their offerings and capacity. Since opening, they've hosted over 2,000 weddings and events, with an average guest count around 250—exactly the sweet spot they'd designed for.  Couples' reviews on Google exceed 4.7 stars with over 550 verified reviews, a testament to the detail-oriented approach that Becky brings to every client interaction.  "We built this business on three core values: Faith, Dreams, and Hard Work," Becky says. "Not just as a slogan on the wall, but as a lived practice. Every decision we make reflects those values." The business success attracted attention. Their oldest son, watching the growth and the potential, recently joined the team to help scale the brand further.

 

THE EXPANSION

Two years ago, Becky and her team launched Boujee Bloom, a floral and decor company that handles the aesthetics for many weddings throughout the metroplex.  The integration is seamless couples can book venue and florals together, with Becky's vision for design executing across both services.

Now, they're launching Aristocrat Bridal, an exclusive bridal gown boutique also located in Little Elm. The idea: create an end-to-end luxury wedding experience where couples can find their venue, their flowers, and their dress all within a few miles of each other—all guided by the same design philosophy and attention to detail.   

"We're not trying to become a one-stop-shop that's mediocre at everything," Brian clarifies. "We're building an ecosystem of premium services, each one excellent, each one aligned with our values."  It's the logical evolution of entrepreneurs who've spent their careers building systems that work.

 

LESSONS & LEGACY

 

Eight years into their unexpected career change, Becky and Brian have learned that the skills that made them successful in tech translated directly to the wedding industry: leadership, problem-solving, financial discipline, and an obsession with detail.  But they've also learned something simpler: that purpose matters.  "When you're building something for a paycheck, you work hard but you're checking a box," Becky reflects. "When you're building something because you believe in it—because you know these moments matter—you work differently. You think about problems differently. You never clock out."

For couples planning a wedding in North Texas, Knotting Hill Place represents not just a beautiful venue, but a space built by people who've chosen to dedicate their expertise to one singular purpose: making their day unforgettable.  For Becky and Brian, it represents something deeper: a life aligned with their values. Faith, dreams, and hard work—not just as words on a wall, but as the architecture of everything, they've built.  "I tell people all the time," Becky says with a smile, "if you're good at building things, build something that matters. Build something you'd want your kids to be proud of."  By that measure, the Banners have built something remarkable.

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Knotting Hill Place

2621 W. Eldorado Parkway, Little Elm, TX 75068

www.knottinghillplace.com

469-444-7844

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Saturday, 20 June 2026